Thanks Usha di. Will prefer Madhuri from you. Requested others. They don't 
listen.
I learnt my Botany from my grand ma. She and me had a habit of bringing cutting 
of any dam plant available in near visinity and plant it around our house. It 
was a jungle in the area of around 100 feet by 20 feet. All Malvaceaes and 
Aposynaceae, paps and what not were there. Most of the plants for  which I have 
told vernacular names were in my jungle, healthy and flowering.
For Gauri, Ganapati and Mangalagauri we use to collect all patries  (leaves), 
from near by. So had to know the names. Nice were those days.
Thanks again. Will surely collect the seeds and photos too!
Madhuri  
Sent from BlackBerry® on Airtel

-----Original Message-----
From: ushadi Micromini <microminipho...@gmail.com>
Sender: indiantreepix@googlegroups.com
Date: Wed, 7 Sep 2011 09:15:33 
To: Madhuri Pejaver<formpeja...@yahoo.com>
Cc: efloraofindia<indiantreepix@googlegroups.com>; Gurcharan 
Singh<singh...@gmail.com>; J.M. Garg<jmga...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [efloraofindia:80100] Malvaceae week 09 05 2011 UD 004 Ban Kapas
 Thespesia lampas Jungli Paras Piplo Kolkata 08

Madhuri ji: what an acute observation as a child... smart.... have you seen
similar plants now?   if you do... please get some pics and seeds... that
would be lovely...
usha di
==

On Wed, Sep 7, 2011 at 2:06 AM, Madhuri Pejaver <formpeja...@yahoo.com>wrote:

> Dear Ushadi
> In my childhood we had a cotton plant in our garden, I do not know the
> genus and sps. But it was called as Dev kapus.
> The cotton balles have seeds inside. In one variety all seeeds are joined
> togather to form one bundle. This is considered as good cotton?
> While the second one has its seeds seperate. For seperating the seeds the
> first one is better, Because cleaning is easy.
> we use to make the battis in lamps from this cotton. the plant was there
> atleast for 10 to 11 years as per my memory. We use to cut it to keep the
> proper height so that we can remove the cotton.  One day it fail in rain
> Madhuri
>
> --- On *Tue, 6/9/11, ushadi Micromini <microminipho...@gmail.com>* wrote:
>
>
> From: ushadi Micromini <microminipho...@gmail.com>
> Subject: [efloraofindia:79982] Malvaceae week 09 05 2011 UD 004 Ban Kapas
> Thespesia lampas Jungli Paras Piplo Kolkata 08
> To: "efloraofindia" <indiantreepix@googlegroups.com>, "Gurcharan Singh" <
> singh...@gmail.com>, "J.M. Garg" <jmga...@gmail.com>
> Date: Tuesday, 6 September, 2011, 6:02 PM
>
>
> Dear All:
>
> This is a new plant for me... never knew cotton plants would go on and on
> for years... this one does apparently... look at its stem... its about 8 - 9
> inches in diameter...  I always thought cotton plants were a yearly
> affair... may be the agricultural pathos had brainwashed me/us...
>
> This was in a well tended herbal Garden ... for demonstration purposes to
> Ethnomedicine and other students..
>
>
> Family :          Malvaceae
>
> * *
>
> *Species:         Thespesia  lampus*  (Cav.) Dalz. Ex. Dalz. & Gibs.  ;
>
>                       Syn:   *Azanzas lampas* (Cav.) Alef.;
>
>                                 *Thespesia macrophylla* Blume
>
> Vernacular names :    Bengali:       Ban Kapas  *  *বন*‌ *কাপাস
>
>                                  Gujarati:      Jungli Para piplo  જંગલી*‌
> *પ।રસ પીપળો
>
>
>
> This specimen was about 9-10 feet tall, grew kinda straight up, had a few
> flowers,   I went in 4 pm , so the flowers were closing, but the petal color
> was still beautiful pink... and a few pods high up had opened up to reveal
> the cotton.  The leaves were varied in size... largest were 7-8 inches long.
>
>
>
>
> What is used is:  Various tribes use differently... Some use flower paste
> for burn,  root paste  for eczema,  juice of young pods on Scabies.  I found
> it very curious that Santhals of Bengal mix  juice of its stem bark and
> Aristolochia indica root paste on snake bite....  this we learned in class.
>
>
> But along a Bengal village by the Damodar river we found an old lady who
> said she had in the past used the root bark juice to induce miscarriage (
> this is quite opposite to the effect of Thepesia populinea root bark paste
> effect... which says it helps women get pregnant, esp get a male child...
> curiouser and curiouser!!!)
>
>
> Come to think of it ... similar plant had been growing beyond the wall of
> students' garden at a Ayurvedic college... and the local young gardeners,
> very sheepishly asked us not to photograph it...
>
> there was so much else to learn that we did not pursue that tree...  but I
> distinctly remember it had cotton pods.. round ones , just like this one...
>
>
> Thanks..
>
> Usha di
>
>

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